If you're a gentoo-sources kind of person, today is your lucky day. I've just uploaded .configs for 3.0.65-gentoo, 3.2.38-gentoo, 3.2.39, 3.4.32-gentoo, 3.7.9-gentoo, and 3.8.0-gentoo in both x86 and x86_64 flavors. Enjoy!

If you're a gentoo-sources kind of person, today is your lucky day. I've just uploaded .configs for 3.0.65-gentoo, 3.2.38-gentoo, 3.2.39, 3.4.32-gentoo, 3.7.9-gentoo, and 3.8.0-gentoo in both x86 and x86_64 flavors. Enjoy!

Cheers,
Pappy

I made a 3.8.0 Kernel, just using my old 3.7.8 .config file, because of extreme laziness, but I think it is time to do one completely fresh again. I suspect my system loads a bit more than it needs to.

Are there any significant changes that I need to look out for? I heard that the THP support is a pretty big thing, is it enabled in your configs?

Yes. Transparent huge page support has been a part of the seeds since it first showed up in 2.6.39. There was much buzz about it when it came out, and as I recall, a few requests to see if it was workable.

A few days off, and I was getting bored. Thank goodness for the hardened-sources folks. I've just uploaded .configs for 2.6.32-hardened-r152, 3.2.39-hardened, and 3.8.0-hardened in both x86 and x86_64 flavors. Enjoy!

Wow! Ten sources at one time in portage! I started the process at about 23:00 Pacific Time, and just finished (01:50). That was intense.

Anyway, I just uploaded .configs for 3.0.67, 3.0.67-gentoo, 3.2.39-gentoo, 3.4.34, 3.4.34-gentoo, 3.5.7-gentoo-r1, 3.6.11-gentoo-r1, 3.7.10-gentoo, 3.8.1, and 3.8.1-gentoo in both x86 and x86_64 flavors. There's a little something in there for everyone, even me. Enjoy!

Tonight's adventure into seed land was nowhere near as intense as last nights. I've just uploaded .configs for 2.6.32-hardened-r153, 3.2.39-hardened-r1, and 3.8.0-hardened-r1 in both x86 and x86_64 flavors. Enjoy!

I've got lots and lots of kernel seeds, because there were lots and lots of sources in portage today. I've just uploaded .configs for 2.6.32-hardened-r158, 3.0.71, 3.2.41-hardened, 3.2.42, 3.4.38, 3.8.4-hardened-r1, and 3.8.5 in both x86 and x86_64 flavors. Enjoy!

What is all this churn with udev, besides making my life misrable and reminding me of the infamous expat problems a few years ago?

What is the ultimate goal, and why are they releasing into production stuff that seems to be changing radically on almost a daily basis?

And this business of changing eth* to net* or whatever you like *EXCEPT* eth* is going to break thousands of scripts that have worked for years!

And to and insult to injury, gnuplot has made some terribly incompatible changes that has broken a large number of my scripts, but that's not a kernel issue, its just another annoyance.

What was so broken about udev that they have to break working systems to try and fix it, yet everytime I turn around, there is a new and incompatible release of udev with a big fat news file I have to read that tells me everything is changing in incompatible ways again.